Taryn Lopez doesn't think it got too terribly cold during the two days she was stranded on Alaska's Mount Mageik volcano.

"I think about 28 degrees was the lowest we saw -- but then the temperature gauge was frozen," she said Saturday evening from King Salmon, Alaska.

Thanks to sleeping bags, waterproof gear and emergency supplies, Lopez, a fellow researcher and a pilot survived unharmed in their iced-over helicopter from Wednesday until a rescue chopper scooped them up Friday.

Photos:Mount Mageik rescue

Photos:Mount Mageik rescue

Alaska mountain rescue – Geophysicist John Paskievitch was stranded for two days on Alaska's Mount Mageik volcano with helicopter pilot Sam Egli and Taryn Lopez, a post-doctoral researcher. The team had flown to the volcano to retrieve instruments on the volcano ahead of the brutal Alaska winter.

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Photos:Mount Mageik rescue

Alaska mountain rescue – Paskievitch, Lopez and Egli are all smiles after they were picked up Friday by the Alaska Air Guard Rescue team and return to King Salmon. The three stayed in sleeping bags inside the helicopter except to answer nature's calls and shoot a flare at the request of the rescuers

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Photos:Mount Mageik rescue

Alaska mountain rescue – The team got this photo of Mount Mageik as they were landing on Wednesday.

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Photos:Mount Mageik rescue

Alaska mountain rescue – The team's iced-over helicopter. "There were blue skies when we landed," Lopez said, but within a half-hour he told the researchers he was concerned about ice on the rotors.

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Photos:Mount Mageik rescue

Alaska mountain rescue – The Alaska Air Guard Rescue team arrives to scoop up the stranded team on Friday.

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Pilot Sam Egli took John Paskievitch, a geophysicist with the U.S. Geological Survey, and Lopez, a post-doctoral researcher, about 6,500 feet up the volcano on Wednesday.

The researchers were picking up instruments to save them from the upcoming winter. Their work is aimed at learning how seismic readings are linked to the underlying causes of earthquakes. Some volcanic earthquakes quakes are caused by moving magma, water or gas, Lopez said. Knowing which substance is moving could help assess the risk of eruptions, she said.

The trio took advantage of a break in the weather Wednesday to land at their highest instrument site on Mageik.

"There were blue skies when we landed," she said. But within half an hour, Egli told the researchers he was concerned about ice on the rotors.

"We grabbed our stuff and got in the helicopter," Lopez said, but even in the few minutes that took visibility became too poor for takeoff.

Egli could call for help by satellite phone and radio, but the weather prevented a rescue attempt on Wednesday. On Thursday, rescuers circled overhead but could not land.

Meanwhile, the three stayed in sleeping bags inside the helicopter except to answer nature's calls and shoot a flare at the request of the rescuers. There was enough food and water on board.

"Even though it wasn't that cold, it was pretty foul when you were outside," Lopez said.

Lopez, 33, grew up in Rochester, Minnesota, and has spent time on mountains in Russia and Alaska, so she was prepared for the cold. But she was grateful for Paskievitch and Egli's decades of experience in the field.

"I felt really luck to be with those people," Lopez said. "I know they kept us all alive."

She also praised the Alaska Air National Guard, which rescued her.

"It was such a relief hearing them up there even when they couldn't get in," she said.

Paskievitch wasn't available to talk Saturday -- because he was back out on the mountain. Lopez said he hoped to check on the condition of the helicopter, where the researchers had to leave their instruments.